Central and Eastern Europe (CEE)
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Turkish retail group Boyner has arranged $170m of loans from local and foreign banks. Most of the deal was supplied by international lenders, despite the country having being downgraded to junk this year.
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Two more Turkish banks opened order books on dollar trades on Tuesday, following Isbank, Vakifbank and Turk Eximbank last week. Sekerbank and Kuyeyt Turk are out with a Basel III tier two and a sukuk respectively.
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Russia’s largest privately owned oil company Lukoil is set to bring its first bond in three years on Wednesday. Demand for the top tier Russian corporate is expected to be strong and could drive pricing inside the borrower's indicative curve, according to rival bankers.
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JP Morgan’s head of CEEMEA credit trading has left his job, according to market sources.
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Moody’s has assigned a provisional Baa1 rating to the mortgage backed covered bonds of Yapi ve Kredi Bankasi and the issuer has published its base prospectus, suggesting it could soon be ready to issue.
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After a three month hiatus, an attempted coup and a sovereign downgrade, Turkish credit is back in the market with three bank trades and two mandates this week alone. But while the sovereign printed a successful $1.5bn last Friday, investor fatigue is translating into lacklustre trades, even though premiums are up.
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The supply of Russian bank paper looked set to continue as three more lenders lined up for dollar deals.